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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Ahmed & Ors v Ingram & Anor [2018] EWCA Civ 519 (19 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/519.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Civ 519 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE IN BANKRUPTCY
Mrs Justice Proudman
IN THE MATTER OF THE INSOLVENCY ACT 1986
AND IN THE MATTER OF EAITISHAM AHMED (A DEBTOR)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE PATTEN
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVID RICHARDS
____________________
(1) KASHIF AHMED (2) BUSHRA AHMED (3) TESNEEM AHMED (4) TABASUM HUSSAIN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) DAVID INGRAM (2) MICHAELA HALL (Joint trustees in bankruptcy of the estate of Eaitisham Ahmed the above-named Debtor) |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Francis Collaço Moraes (instructed by Max Legal Limited) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 24 October 2017 - 25 October 2017
Further submissions filed: 31 October 2017 and 1 November 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Gloster:
Introduction
Factual Background
i) the first appellant entered into a written guarantee in respect of certain payments that the bankrupt agreed were going to be made in the IVA ("the guarantee"); the guarantee acknowledged that the bankrupt had an interest in each of the companies;
ii) under the terms of the guarantee the bankrupt agreed to transfer the relevant shares in the companies to the first appellant absolutely (as well as other assets) in consideration of the provision by the first appellant of the guarantee.
The issues on the appeal
i) S284: Does s.284 of the Insolvency Act 1986 provide a free-standing right to recover the value of the shares as awarded by the judge, namely the value of the shares as at the transfer date, less their value as at the date of their redelivery to the trustees? (This issue was raised by the respondents' notice.)
ii) Approach to determination of liability: If issue i) is decided in the negative, were the trustees in bankruptcy automatically entitled to be compensated in respect of the difference in value between the value of the shares as at the transfer date, less their value as at the date of their redelivery to the trustees, or were the latter only entitled to be compensated for any diminution in the value of the shares which the trustees in bankruptcy could prove that the estate had actually suffered as a result of breach of trust on the part of the appellants?
iii) Pleading and evidence point: If issue ii) is decided on the basis ("the loss basis") that the trustees in bankruptcy were obliged to prove the loss which the estate had actually suffered as a result of a breach of trust on the part of the appellants, had the trustees in bankruptcy adequately pleaded and proved such breach of trust? Had they failed to do so, and, if so, should their claim be dismissed?
iv) Date of calculation of loss: If issue ii) is decided on the loss basis, as at what date should the loss be calculated?
v) Method of valuation: If liability was established, was the judge correct that the shares should be valued at fair, as opposed to market, value?
vi) Liability of sisters: Was the judge correct to find the sisters jointly liable with the first appellant?
The appellants' submissions before this court
i) S284: S.284 was silent as to the remedy available to a bankruptcy estate when a disposition had been avoided. The appropriate remedy was governed by the general law: Re J Leslie Engineers Co Ltd [1976] 1 WLR 292 at 298B-D, Hollicourt (Contracts) Ltd v Bank of Ireland [2000] EWCA Civ 263 at [22] and Rose v AIB Group (UK) PLC [2003] EWHC 1737 (Ch) at [30].
ii) Approach to determination of liability: The trustees were only entitled to be compensated for any diminution in the value of the shares which the trustees in bankruptcy could prove that the estate had actually suffered as a result of a breach of trust on the part of the appellants. In particular:
a) The authorities established that the remedy is a restitutionary one, the purpose of which is to replace a loss to the trust fund which the trustee has brought about: AIB Group (UK) plc v Mark Redler & Co Solicitors [2014] UKSC 58 at [65]. AIB and Target Holdings v Redferns [1996] AC 421 supported the proposition that, in order to be able to recover equitable compensation, actual loss had to be proved. The appellants accepted that this remedy was available even where there had been a return of the asset.
b) Further, the judge had erred as a matter of law and or fact in finding that the respondents had established actual loss to the bankruptcy estate.
c) The respondents' use of a value as at the transfer date of the shares (5/6 June 2007) represented a hypothetical value. It was some 22 months before the bankruptcy and 24 months before Mr Hosking as the trustee in bankruptcy was appointed. On any analysis, the shares would not have been realised on that date. In determining equitable compensation, the court cannot ignore the reality of what would have actually happened: see Lord Toulson at [64] – [67] and Lord Reed at [107] in AIB and Lord Browne-Wilkinson at p 436 in Target Holdings.
d) The effect of the judge's order was actually to grant an unfair and erroneous windfall to the bankruptcy estate which bore no correlation to reality and was contrary to both the trustees in bankruptcy's own case and evidence and the principles confirmed in AIB and Target Holdings.
e) The judge was wrong to have found that the case did not involve the temporary deprivation of an asset and in distinguishing this case from the principle confirmed in Brandeis Goldschmidt & Co Ltd v Western Transport Ltd [1981] QB 864. Equity should follow the law on conversion cases.
iii) Pleading and evidence point: The judge erred in finding that the trustees in bankruptcy were not obliged to plead and prove actual loss to the bankruptcy estate in terms of when the shares would have been sold by the trustees, to whom and at what price. The respondents' case was insufficient in a number of ways. They were required to show when the shares would have been sold by the trustees in bankruptcy, to whom and at what price. Their failure to do so meant that their action failed from the outset.
iv) Date of calculation of loss: The respondents argued that liability for breach should be determined as at the transfer date and that liability to account flowed from that date.
a) However, as at the transfer date, the shares had been transferred but the first appellant was not a trustee and could not have committed any breach of trust.
b) Once the bankruptcy order was made, the effect of s.284 was retrospectively to create a restitutionary trust that had not previously existed prior to the date on which the order was made. There could be no breach as at this point.
c) If the first appellant were to be liable, the breach could only have occurred as from the date the trustees in bankruptcy demanded the shares. However, there was no demand.
d) The date at which the value of the shares had to be determined was necessarily the date at which the shares would have been sold by the trustees. As such, if the first appellant was liable, the only correct valuation date was 30 June 2010, because that was the only date that fell within the window of possible dates on the trustees in bankruptcy's own case.
v) Method of valuation: If the appellants were unsuccessful on issue (i), then nonetheless the judge erred as a matter of law in finding the shares were to be valued at a fair value, not at market value.
vi) Liability of sisters: The finding that the second to fourth appellants were jointly liable was wrong as a matter of law and/or fact. There was insufficient evidence to support such a finding.
The respondents' submissions before this court
i) S284: The judge ought to have concluded that the Insolvency Act 1986 provided a freestanding right pursuant to s.284 to recover compensation for loss arising out of the illegitimate transfer. That right required the restoration of the bankruptcy estate as at the date of the impugned disposition: see Harman J in Re McGuinness Bros. UK. (1987) 3 BCC at 571.
ii) Approach to determination of liability: Contrary to the appellant's assertion, the judge did find that actual loss had been suffered. There could not have been any evidence of an actual sale as the appellants deliberately and wrongly detained the shares. Further, the judge was correct in holding that the bankruptcy estate suffered actual loss:
a) The statutory matrix meant that the estate was the estate of the bankrupt at the date of commencement of the bankruptcy, via a bankruptcy petition, including avoided dispositions. The appellants had actual notice of the petition for bankruptcy making the share transfers void without a validation order. The trust was a real trust imposed by statute to preserve assets of the bankrupt's estate, which arose at the date of the disposition: In re Gray's Inn Construction [1980] 1 WLR 711 at p 716E.
b) The shares were taken out of the estate on 5 June 2007. On that date, the first appellant became a bare trustee of the shares. Given the context, namely that he was aware of the bankruptcy petition at the time of the disposition, he had an immediate obligation to restore the estate. Failure to do so constituted a breach.
c) The estate was depleted by its value on this date and this is the date from which loss must be assessed: Kuwait Airways Corpn v Iraqi Airways Co (Nos 4 and 5) [2002] AC 883.
d) The remedy was one of restoration of the position as at the date of the void disposition: see In re Gray's Inn, In re Hollicourt (Contracts) Ltd v Bank of Ireland [2001] Ch 555, Rose v AIB Group (UK) plc and another [2003] EWHC 1737 and Pettit v Novakovic [2007] BPIR 1643.
e) The trustees in bankruptcy were under an obligation to sell the shares. The judge was correct to conclude that, given the wrongful detention of the shares and their fall in value, specific restitution was not possible and a compensatory remedy was not limited to merely returning the asset: Re French's Wine Bar Limited (1987) 3 BCC 173 J at p 178 (2nd column).
f) Relevant trust authorities on wrongful payments of money established that returning the original asset was often not enough and more can be recovered to compensate for loss which would not have been suffered, but for the breach. The only limitation was that a claimant could not recover more than what had in fact been lost: Target Holdings at p 436C-E, 437H and 439B.
g) As confirmed in AIB, if the value of the trust could not be restored in specie, then value would have to be put back in to put the beneficiary back in the position he would have been in but for the breach:
h) The judge correctly distinguished the decision in Brandeis Goldschmidt & Co Ltd v Western Transport Ltd [1981] QB 864 and was right to find this case involved permanent deprivation of an asset.
iii) Pleading and evidence point: The judge was correct to find that the trustees in bankruptcy did not have to plead the amount of the actual loss suffered.
iv) Date of calculation of loss: The judge correctly concluded that the correct date for valuation was the transfer date - i.e. 5 June 2007. That was when the estate had been depleted and, accordingly, the first appellant, as trustee, came under an immediate obligation to restore the shares, which the trustee had taken for the trustee's own benefit. The misapplication of the trust fund was the wrongful disposition. However, if there were a requirement of a triggering event, the following were alternative dates as at which the loss should be calculated:
a) the date of the bankruptcy order on 21 April 2009 which crystallised the position; the appellants came under an obligation to restore the estate at this point and their failure to do so constituted a breach;
b) in the further alternative, the relevant date was the date on which the trustees in bankruptcy would have sold the shares; the appellants came under an obligation to restore the estate as at this date and their failure to do so constituted a breach;
c) in the further alternative, the relevant date was when the transferees had notice of the trustees in bankruptcy's claim; the appellants came under an obligation to restore the estate at this point and the failure to do so constituted a breach.
v) Method of valuation: The judge correctly concluded the shares should be valued on the basis of a fair valuation in the circumstances of the case.
vi) Liability of sisters: The judge correctly concluded the second to fourth appellants were jointly liable with the first appellant and there was sufficient evidence to support such a finding. In particular:
a) The sisters were aware of the bankruptcy petition and the fact that the shares had been transferred to the first appellant; nonetheless, they accepted the shares subsequently transferred to them by the first appellant without question and, until shortly before the trial, positively sought to validate those wrongful transfers.
b) They would only suffer unfairness if the first appellant were to fail to honour the indemnity which they were entitled to from him. In this connection it was relevant to note that not only have the second to fourth appellants still not indicated when they received the relevant shares (or for that matter when they claimed to have transferred them back to the first appellant), but they took no steps in the proceedings to assert the indemnity they have from the first appellant.
Discussion and determination
Issue (i) – A free-standing remedy under s284?
"As Oliver J pointed out in Re J Leslie Engineers Co Ltd [1976] 1 WLR 292 at 298 the invalidating provisions (then to be found in section 227 of the Companies Act 1948) do not spell out the appropriate remedy of the company when the disposition is avoided. The right of recovery of the company's property which has been disposed of is determined by the general law. It is common ground in these proceedings that the right of recovery, whether invoked against the payees or against the Bank, is restitutionary."
Issue (ii) – Approach to the determination of liability:
"72. The second respondent held as trustee from 5 or 6 June 2007 and owed fiduciary duties including the duty to preserve the value of the asset. The trustees would have realised the Shares soon after their appointment for the benefit of the creditors and the second respondent cannot get round this by appropriating the assets to his own use. The court therefore has to restore the fund, preserving the value of the estate for the benefit of the creditors. It is not enough to say, by analogy with In Re French's Wine Bar Limited [1987] 3 BCC 173 at 178, that the beneficial owner can require the property to be transferred to him and to account for any profits. A loss has "in fact [been] suffered by the beneficiaries" and "using hindsight and common sense, can be seen to have been caused by the breach."
"the bankrupt's estate is entitled to be restored to the position it would have been in had the [first appellant] not retained the Shares, as if the trustees in bankruptcy had only had them they would have realised them in accordance with their duties."
"64. All agree that the basic right of a beneficiary is to have the trust duly administered in accordance with the provisions of the trust instrument, if any, and the general law. Where there has been a breach of that duty, the basic purpose of any remedy will be either to put the beneficiary in the same position as if the breach had not occurred or to vest in the beneficiary any profit which the trustee may have made by reason of the breach (and which ought therefore properly to be held on behalf of the beneficiary). Placing the beneficiary in the same position as he would have been in but for the breach may involve restoring the value of something lost by the breach or making good financial damage caused by the breach. But a monetary award which reflected neither loss caused nor profit gained by the wrongdoer would be penal.[4]
65. The purpose of a restitutionary order is to replace a loss to the trust fund which the trustee has brought about. To say that there has been a loss to the trust fund in the present case of £2.5m by reason of the solicitors' conduct, when most of that sum would have been lost if the solicitors had applied the trust fund in the way that the bank had instructed them to do, is to adopt an artificial and unrealistic view of the facts.
66. I would reiterate Lord Browne-Wilkinson's statement, echoing McLachlin J's judgment in Canson, about the object of an equitable monetary remedy for breach of trust, whether it be sub-classified as substitutive or reparative. As the beneficiary is entitled to have the trust properly administered, so he is entitled to have made good any loss suffered by reason of a breach of the duty. The purpose of a restitutionary order is to replace a loss to the trust fund which the trustee has brought about."
This "causation loss" point was further emphasised by Lord Reed at [107]:
"…to impose an obligation to reconstitute the trust fund, in order to enable the client to recover more than he has in fact lost, "flies in the face and is in direct conflict with the basic principles of equitable compensation." That is clearly correct. As Lord Browne-Wilkinson went on to explain, an obligation to reconstitute the trust fund does not inexorably require a payment into the fund of the value of misapplied property, for example where the consequences of the breach of trust have been mitigated by subsequent events."
"At common law there are two principles fundamental to the award of damages. First, that the defendant's wrongful act must cause the damage complained of. Second, that the plaintiff is to be put "in the same position as he would have been in if he had not sustained the wrong for which he is now getting his compensation or reparation:" Livingstone v. Rawyards Coal Co. (1880) 5 App.Cas. 25, F 39, per Lord Blackburn. Although, as will appear, in many ways equity approaches liability for making good a breach of trust from a different starting point, in my judgment those two principles are applicable as much in equity as at common law. Under both systems liability is fault-based: the defendant is only liable for the consequences of the legal wrong he has done to the plaintiff and to make good the damage caused by such wrong. He is not responsible for damage not caused by his wrong or to pay by way of compensation more than the loss suffered from such wrong. The detailed rules of equity as to causation and the quantification of loss differ, at least ostensibly, from those applicable at common law. But the principles underlying both systems are the same…
…a trustee in breach of trust must restore or pay to the trust estate either the assets which have been lost to the estate by reason of the breach or compensation for such loss. Courts of Equity did not award damages but, acting in personam, ordered the defaulting trustee to restore the trust estate: see Nocton v. Lord Ashburton [1914] AC 932, 952, 958, per Viscount Haldane L.C. If specific restitution of the trust property is not possible, then the liability of the trustee is to pay sufficient compensation to the trust estate to put it back to what it would have been had the breach not been committed: Caffrey v. Darby (1801) 6 Ves. 488; Clough v. Bond (1838) 3 M. & C. 490. Even if the immediate cause of the loss is the dishonesty or failure of a third party, the trustee is liable to make good that loss to the trust estate if, but for the breach, such loss would not have occurred: see Underbill and Hayton, Law of Trusts & trustees 14th ed. (1987), pp. 734-736; In re Dawson, deed.; Union Fidelity Trustee Co. Ltd. v. Perpetual Trustee Co. Ltd. [1966] 2 N.S.W.R. 211; Bartlett v. Barclays Bank Trust Co. Ltd. (Nos. I and 2) [1980] Ch. 515. Thus the common law rules of remoteness of damage and causation do not apply. However there does have to be some causal connection between the breach of trust and the loss to the trust estate for which compensation is recoverable, viz. the fact that the loss would not have occurred but for the breach: see also In re Miller's Deed Trusts (1978) 75 L.S.G. 454; Nestle v. National Westminster Bank Pic. [1993] 1 WLR 1260…
…But the basic equitable principle applicable to breach of trust is that the beneficiary is entitled to be compensated for any loss he would not have suffered but for the breach…"
Lord Browne-Wilkinson further held at p 439A-B:
"Equitable compensation for breach of trust is designed to achieve exactly what the word compensation suggests: to make good a loss in fact suffered by the beneficiaries and which, using hindsight and common sense, can be seen to have been caused by the breach."
iii) Pleading and evidence point:
iv) Date of calculation of loss
When did the first appellant and/or the sisters become a trustee or trustees?
"The section must, in my judgment, invalidate every transaction to which it applies at the instant at which that transaction purports to have taken place."
But Buckley LJ was not, of course, considering the position of a transferee in the historic interim when it was uncertain whether a bankruptcy order would be made. He was looking at a case where a winding up order had already been made as at the date that the judge had to determine the application to validate. In my view, the position is somewhat more nuanced in the interim period.
"Conclusion
For more than four centuries the act of bankruptcy formed the cornerstone of the English law of bankruptcy. It represented a form of cessio bonorum which marked the moment at which the debtor became insolvent and from which he was to be "reputed, deemed and taken for a bankrupt." Bankruptcy proceedings could be taken against him by any of his creditors whose debt was in existence at the date of the act of bankruptcy. If the debtor was afterwards adjudicated bankrupt, his assets were divisible among his creditors as from the time when he became bankrupt, not from the time when he was adjudged to be so. From this the judges deduced the doctrine of relation back. If the debtor was adjudicated bankrupt, then the title of the trustee in bankruptcy related back to the time of the first available act of bankruptcy. The doctrine was given statutory form in the Act of 1869, the relevant provisions of which were re-enacted without material alteration in the Acts of 1883 and 1914. Together with the act of bankruptcy itself it was finally swept away by the Insolvency Act 1986, following the recommendations of the Cork Committee which expressed its opposition to the whole concept of a notional cessation of payments earlier than the commencement of bankruptcy proceedings: see Report of the Review Committee on Insolvency Law and Practice (1982) (Cmnd. 8558).
It is clear from the authorities that the relation back of the trustee's title did not merely make the title of the debtor himself or any person claiming through the debtor defeasible in the event of adjudication. If the debtor was adjudicated bankrupt, then as from the date of the act of bankruptcy neither the debtor nor any such person claiming under him who could not bring himself within the protective provisions of the Bankruptcy Acts had any title at all; as from that date title was vested in the trustee. The position of the debtor and persons who claimed under him during the intermediate period was extremely curious. They did not possess a defeasible title, but either an indefeasible title if the act of bankruptcy was not followed by adjudication or no title at all if it was. Outside the law of bankruptcy no similar ambulatory title was known to the law.
This was expressly decided by this court in In re Gunsbourg [1920] 2 K.B. 426, but it is also the basis of the reasoning in many of the earlier cases which I have cited (especially Doe d. Lloyd v. Powell, 5 B. & C. 308; Ex parte Edwards, In re Chapman, 13 Q.B.D. 747; In re Pollitt; Ex parte Minor [1893] 1 QB 455; In re Carl Hirth; Ex parte The Trustee [1899] 1 QB 612). In many of the cases the result would have been the same whether the title of the debtor vested in the trustee at the date of the act of bankruptcy or not; but in others the result would have been different if it had not (for example Doe d. Lloyd v. Powell, 5 B. & C. 308; Montefiore v. Guedalla [1901] 1 Ch 435; In re Ashwell; Ex parte Salaman [1912] 1 KB 390; In re Gunsbourg [1920] 2 K.B. 426). Since the property of the debtor vested in the trustee from the act of bankruptcy, it followed that it was divested from the debtor from the same date. If the debtor was a joint tenant, then if adjudication followed his act of bankruptcy operated to sever the joint tenancy with immediate effect. This was so where both the joint tenants were still alive (Cooper v. Chitty, 1 Burr. 20; Fox v. Hanbury, 2 Cowp. 445; Fraser v. Kershaw, 2 K. & J. 496; Morgan v. Marquis, 9 Exch. 145); where the solvent joint tenant had died in the interim (Smith v. Stokes, 1 East 363); and where it was the debtor who had died (In re Palmer, decd. (A Debtor) [1994] Ch 316).
It is true, as counsel for the trustee submitted, that the purpose of the statutory provisions was to defeat dealings with the debtor's property after the act of bankruptcy, and that the acquisition by the trustee of property by survivorship would not conflict with that statutory purpose. But the method by which that purpose was given effect was not (as in the Companies Acts) to avoid all dispositions of the debtor's property after the relevant date, but to divest the debtor of his property at that date. In my judgment the decision of Sir Donald Nicholls V.-C. that the property of the debtor was not divested until he was adjudicated bankrupt cannot be supported.
There remains the question whether the decision of the Vice-Chancellor can be supported on the narrow ground that whereas the trustee can rely on the doctrine of relation back to found a claim to property formerly belonging to the debtor, and to claim that a joint tenancy has been severed where it is the debtor who has died in the interim, the personal representatives of a deceased joint tenant cannot rely on the doctrine in order to deprive the trustee of his claim to an interest which has accrued to the debtor by survivorship.
In my judgment such a contention cannot be accepted. It is contrary to the decision in Smith v. Stokes which is direct authority on the point, and to other cases in which the doctrine of relation back operated to the disadvantage of the trustee (as in Montefiore v. Guedalla). A similar contention has occasionally surfaced in argument, but it has received no support in any of the cases when properly understood. Moreover, it cannot be correct in principle. The vesting of the debtor's property in the trustee which occurred on adjudication was automatic; the trustee had no choice in the matter. In some circumstance (as in In re Gunsbourg) he might have a right to elect whether to treat a transaction as constituting an act of bankruptcy. If he elected to do so, he could not avoid the consequences. The relation back of his title to the act of bankruptcy was an automatic statutory consequence. The trustee could not lay claim to the property and deny that it had vested in him at the anterior date."
"section 284 has a dual effect. First, it supplements the relation back of the trustee's title by avoiding dispositions after the date of presentation of the petition. Secondly, it protects dispositions after the presentation of the petition and before the appointment of the trustee which fall within subsections (4) and (5); to that extent it reflects (though it is not coterminous with) section 45 of the Bankruptcy Act 1914"(at 334C-D).
i) contingently for the bankrupt, in the event that a bankruptcy order was indeed made against him; and
ii) subject thereto (i.e. in the event that no such order was made), for himself as absolute owner of both the legal and beneficial title.
As from the date when the bankruptcy order was made on 21 April 2009, the first appellant and/or the sisters (if they had had some of the shares transferred to them by this date, as to which see below) held the legal title on trust for the bankrupt and title to them was vested in Mr Hosking, on the latter's appointment as trustee in bankruptcy on 22 July 2009. An alternative analysis would be that the first appellant and/or the sisters held a defeasible or voidable title from the transfer date until the bankruptcy order and thereafter no title to the shares at all, since the transfer was, retrospectively, void. However, the claim for equitable compensation was premised on the trust analysis and I see no reason to depart from it as it makes little difference to the ultimate outcome.
When did the first appellant and/or the sisters commit a breach of trust?
i) Her finding that all of the appellants had actual notice of the bankruptcy petition of 23 January 2007 prior to the share transfers at [70].
ii) Her finding that there was a deliberate attempt to rig the votes in the IVA so that the family could retain the shares at [67], albeit one to which the sisters were not party.
iii) Her finding that the first appellant inflated the alleged debt which he said was owed to him and created a debt in Hornby in an attempt to award himself the shares at [80].
"4. Should the IVA fail as a result of the legal challenged mounted by Monecor (London) Limited under No. 19-10-2007 (No. 973 of 2007) in the High Court of Justice in London, this guarantee will be void and of no further effect and any money paid thereunder by the Guarantor to the Supervisors (less proper professional fees) will be refunded forthwith."
When did the loss occur?
…the fact that there is an accrued cause of action as soon as the breach is committed does not in my judgment mean that the quantum of the compensation payable is ultimately fixed as at the date when the breach occurred. The quantum is fixed at the date of judgment at which date, according to the circumstances then pertaining, the compensation is assessed at the figure then necessary to put the trust estate or the beneficiary back into the position it would have been in had there been no breach. I can see no justification for "stopping the clock" immediately in some cases but not in others: to do so may, as in this case, lead to compensating the trust estate or the beneficiary for a loss which, on the facts known at trial, it has never suffered."
Issue v): Method of valuation:
Issue (vi) – Liability of the sisters
i) the finding that all of the appellants had actual notice of the bankruptcy petition of 23 January 2007 prior to the share transfers at [70];
ii) the finding that all of the family members were aware that the bankrupt was insolvent and that obtaining the shares in return for payment would result in the creditors being disadvantaged, if as eventually happened, the IVA failed at [71];
iii) the finding at [68] that:
"it is inconceivable that, bearing in mind the closeness of the family and the fact that Mr Andronikou acted for all the [appellants], the bankrupt (who knew about the petition at latest on 5 February 2007) would not have told the other [appellants] of the existence of the petition, and why it was so urgent for him to enter into an IVA";
iv) the rejection of the first appellant's attempt to withdraw evidence in paragraph 42 of his witness statement as an opportunistic attempt to exclude his sisters from liability at [66]; and
v) the fact that the sisters did not give any evidence at [113].
Disposition
Lord Justice Patten:
Lord Justice David Richards:
Note 1 In fact the judge assumed that the transfer date was 5 June 2007, which was the date on which the bankrupt had agreed to transfer the shares to the first appellant under the terms of the guarantee referred to in paragraph 18 below. The actual transfer took place, as I have said, on 6 June 2007. There is no difference for valuation purposes between the two dates although I have defined the transfer date as 6 June 2007. [Back] Note 2 S284 provides: “(1) Where a person is adjudged bankrupt, any disposition of property made by that person in the period to which this section applies is void except to the extent that it is or was made with the consent of the court, or is was subsequently ratified by the court. …… (3) This section applies to the period beginning with the day of the presentation of the petition for the bankruptcy order and ending with the vesting, under Chapter IV of this Part, of the bankrupt's estate in the trustee." [Back] Note 3 Peter Gibson, Mummery and Latham LJJ. [Back] Note 4 All bolded text in this judgment is my emphasis. [Back] Note 5 See paras 72 and 75 of the judgment. [Back] Note 6 This provided: “In a winding up by the court, any disposition of the property of the company, including things in action, and any transfer of shares, or alteration in the status of the members of the company, made after the commencement of the winding up, shall, unless the court otherwise orders, be void.” The comparable provision in the Insolvency Act 1986 is s127. It is in similar terms to s227. [Back] Note 7 It was not in dispute between the parties that the legal title to the shares had been transferred. As I explain below, an alternative analysis is that there was no trust, but merely a defeasible title held by the first appellant. [Back] Note 8 It was common ground on the appeal that the judge was wrong in her conclusion in this respect. [Back] Note 9 See below as to the date from which it is to be inferred that the sisters first held the shares. [Back] Note 10 There was no suggestion that there was any involvement of the Official Receiver or any realistic possibility of handing the shares back to him. [Back]